Journal of Lipid Research (Sep 1970)

Studies on the compartmentation of lipid in adipose cells. I: Subcellular distribution, composition, and transport of newly synthesized lipid: liposomes

  • AUBIE ANGEL

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
pp. 420 – 432

Abstract

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The subcellular distribution and composition of endogenously synthesized lipid in isolated white adipose cells were studied to determine the nature and extent of lipid compartmentation. After brief incubation of cells with labeled glucose, acetate, or palmitic acid, over 90% of newly synthesized triglyceride was localized in the bulk-lipid phase, indicating rapid intracellular transport and storage. From 13 to 20% of the newly formed lipid was diglyceride, and over 95% of it was localized in the central lipid-storage vacuole rather than in organelle systems concerned with esterification, thus indicating intracellular segregation of newly synthesized partial glycerides. Most of the newly synthesized phosphatides partitioned with membranous organelles. Synthesis of cholesterol or cholesteryl ester was negligible.After brief incubation of cells with labeled glucose, the relative specific activity of organelle triglyceride was mitochondria ≫ microsomes > liposomes > soluble supernatant > bulk lipid. In pulse-chase studies the specific activity of organelle triglyceride decreased and that of the bulk fraction increased reflecting intracellular lipid transport. The data suggest that a significant proportion of newly formed lipid is transferred from mitochondrial membranes into the storage vacuole by direct lipid–lipid interaction. Liposomes, which consist of small enclosed lipid droplets resembling chylomicrons, contained triglycerides of specific activity similar to microsomal triglyceride. While the evidence that liposome triglyceride may be microsomal in origin is indirect, the results do indicate that the liposome fraction represents a phase in the transport and(or) storage of new glyceride.At least two forms of compartmentation of newly synthesized lipids occurred. The first, termed “structural,” refers to localization of lipids to organelle fractions. The second type of compartmentation, termed “chemical,” concerns the intracellular segregation of a specific lipid class. The accumulation and segregation of newly synthesized diglyceride in the bulk storage pool are examples of the latter form of compartmentation.

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